Vast and Impressive City Ruins in Antarctica!!!

Originally posted by ignorant_ape
^ the microscopic thumbnails of uselessness ^

you can click on them...get a full screen image. "Crater Face"" is the most compelling evidence as is does not appear to have been virtually
destroyed by glaciers.

What looks like a face (like mars)
A center monolith surrounded by 5 stones arranged in a pentagram design
a rectangular altar of some kind

The dragons were in jest...that's paradolia.

I couldn't imagine there'd be much left of NYC if a glacier mowed over it.
All we're gonna find are ruins...some worse that others, and it would appear that our elders had roads, bridges, I still have a lot of images to
share...imageshack embedded the photos like that and I'll find out how to resize them. The Hand Glyph is pretty compelling as well.

Snow and ice doesn't always build up or melt evenly either...further skewing anything emerging from it. The Coordinates are on the bottom right
corner of the images,,,look for yourself.

I can't believe I read 8 pages of nonsense from someone who can't tell the difference between wishful thinking, and natural formations. Good lord,
just examine the US's mountain ranges or the Swiss Alps, or any other mountain range from above, your suspect shapes are everywhere, snow-covered or
not.

P.S Your thread title is misleading as sin. As an Antarctica enthusiast all about the research bases, abandoned camps, to the geology, and the
fossils, I feel beyond duped. Not cool

Nope natural again, you might want to look at examples of how rock cools and fractures when doing so.

Okay. I'm not a geologist.
I am going to post the crater again though. I find this the most interesting. I find the hand very compelling as well...you have to actually go to it
on Google Earth and play around with the compass direction and bearing to see different angles.

I'm probably going to get 19 out of 20 wrong...it's the 1 "maybe" or the 1 "definitely" that will spark more interest I hope.

Nope natural again, you might want to look at examples of how rock cools and fractures when doing so.

Okay. I'm not a geologist.
I am going to post the crater again though. I find this the most interesting. I find the hand very compelling as well...you have to actually go to it
on Google Earth and play around with the compass direction and bearing to see different angles.

I'm probably going to get 19 out of 20 wrong...it's the 1 "maybe" or the 1 "definitely" that will spark more interest I hope.

I'm going to search regardless.

Well good who knows what interesting geology you will find, best of luck in your search.

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